The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

Welcome to the ‘Island of Four Seasons’

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Danielle Demetriou relishes being one of the first to board Japan’s new luxury train

Sitting beneath a contempora­ry chandelier, I sipped a glass of chilled white Japanese wine as a bowing waitress placed a dish before me – an artful compositio­n of delicate sea eel with strips of cucumber and a scattering of rainbow-bright flowers.

No, I was not sitting in one of Tokyo’s countless high-end restaurant­s. Instead, I was rolling through sunlit countrysid­e while sitting on board Japan’s newest and most luxurious technologi­cal creation: Train Suite Shiki-shima.

The new 10-car sleeper train, which embarks on its inaugural voyage on Monday, is an exercise in luxury travel on wheels: from its champagne-gold exterior, opulent suites, Michelin-starred chefs and uniformed butlers to its futuristic observatio­n cars, lacquerwar­e latticewor­k and aromatic cypress wood baths.

The JR East-operated train – whose name means “Island of Four Seasons” – will carry up to 34 passengers a time from Tokyo across the northern Tohoku region (the worst-hit area in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami) as well as the northernmo­st island Hokkaido, for trips of between one and three nights’ duration.

In addition to a luxury interior to rival a top five-star hotel – created by Ken Kiyoyuki Okuyama, a designer famed for his work with Porsche, Ferrari and several bullet trains – Shiki-shima also showcases cutting-edge rail technology, with an ultra-modern motor that can be used both on diesel engine and electric train lines.

Perhaps the only thing Shiki-shima isn’t about is speed: it travels up to a modest 110 kph – nearly three times slower than the 320 kph top speed of the nation’s fastest bullet train.

Despite the hefty pricetag for travelling on the train (from £2,242/ Y320,500 per person), there is clearly a market for such a luxury: it is already sold out until March 2018.

Shiki-shima’s popularity confirms Japan’s growing trend for slow but luxurious rail travel – an apparent reflection of its rapidly ageing population and the growing value of the deep-pocketed “silver market”.

The new train joins the ranks of the opulent Seven Stars train which has operated across southern Kyushu since 2013. Meanwhile, the new Twilight Express Mizukaze, a 10-car deluxe sleeper train covering western Japan, launches in June.

As a Tokyo resident, I was fortunate to be the first non-Japanese journalist invited to travel on board the train The Shiki-shima combines futuristic design outside with an elegant mix of contempora­ry Japanese design and craftsmans­hip inside before its launch and my experience began at a sleek contempora­ry lounge called Prologue Shiki-shima – where pre-trip green tea and traditiona­l higashi sweets are served – in an unusually quiet corner of Tokyo’s salaryman-filled Ueno station. After passing through a grandiose gate at the entrance of Platform 13.5 (with one member of staff exclaiming: “It’s just like Harry Potter!”), I walked along a red carpet before being greeted by bowing staff in tailored taupe suites as I stepped into the Lounge car. If the exterior of the train is undeniably futuristic, the inside, punctuated by geometric patterns of cut-out windows, is an elegant mix of contempora­ry Japanese design and artisan craftsmans­hip. The forest-inspired Lounge has curved gold-metal “branches” lining the interior walls, a black piano (guests can make musical requests in advance), a modern glass fireplace (using steam technology for safety) and Herringbon­e parquet wood flooring.

Narrow corridors leading to the 17 sleeper suites showcase Japan’s artisan heritage, with lacquerwar­e latticewor­k in the form of traditiona­l flowers and doors covered with interwoven strips of leather-like brown metal.

My temporary home was suite 903, an elegant space filled with a

 ??  ?? The menu was devised by Michelin chef Katsuhiro Nakamura
The menu was devised by Michelin chef Katsuhiro Nakamura
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